Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Hibernian Greensands Group

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Type
  
Group

Thickness
  
21-22m

Overlies
  
unconformable

Primary
  
marls

Hibernian Greensands Group

Sub-units
  
Kilcoan Sands Formation, Collinwell Sands Formation, Island Magee Siltstones Formation, Belfast Marls Formation

Underlies
  
Ulster White Limestone Group

The Hibernian Greensands Group is a late Cretaceous lithostratigraphic group (a sequence of rock strata) in Northern Ireland. The name is derived from the characteristically coloured marls and sandstones which occur beneath the chalk particularly along the Antrim coast. The strata are exposed on or near to both the northern and eastern coasts of Antrim and also between Portrush and Dungiven within County Londonderry. Further outcrops occur between Belfast and Lurgan and between Dungannon and Magherafelt. The current names replace an earlier situation where the present group was considered to be a formation and each of the present formations was considered a 'member'. Several other stratigraphic naming schemes were in use during the nineteenth century and much of the twentieth century. Various units were earlier referred to as glauconitic or chloritic marls. This group and the overlying Ulster White Limestone Group are the stratigraphical equivalent of the Chalk Group of southern and eastern England.

Stratigraphy

  • Kilcoan Sands Formation
  • Collinwell Sands Formation
  • Island Magee Siltstones Formation
  • Belfast Marls Formation
  • There are unconformities (non-sequences) above and below the Collinwell Sands Formation.

    References

    Hibernian Greensands Group Wikipedia